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Previous Turbeville Speakers

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Pamela J. TurbevillePamela J. Turbeville graduated with distinction from the University of Arizona in 1972 as a double major in Family and Consumer Sciences and Education. Upon graduating, Ms. Turbeville pursued graduate degrees (MBA in Finance from the University of Denver, MS in Environmental Science from the University of Texas at Dallas) and executive education (Stanford Executive Program). She was selected to receive the 2000 College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) Alumni Achievement Award at the Homecoming event. Ms. Turbeville has strong family ties to the University of Arizona. Her father, John H. Turbeville, two aunts, and many other family members received UA degrees. In 2000, to support faculty research and teaching, Ms. Turbeville established The Pamela J. Turbeville Endowment in the School of Family and Consumer Sciences. Read More

 


Fall 2023 - Spring 2024

Jeannette Maré, Science of Kindness Community Collective, The University of Arizona

Time: Friday, December 1, 2023 from 1:00 PM - 2:15 PM

Title: State of Kindness: A Mixed-Methods Reasoned Action Approach to Understanding Prosocial Communication in Organizations

 

Link to Presentation Recording: https://youtu.be/UG9KmRpLtH0?feature=shared

 

Abstract:  A rapidly growing body of evidence concludes that kindness is important for human health and well-being, both in our personal lives and at work. In organizations, kindness benefits consumers, employees, and the organization itself. Consumers who are treated with kindness have better outcomes and employees who work in kind environments are more satisfied and engaged in their work. Despite the known benefits of kindness in organizations, research supports the urgent need to increase kind behavior. Theory-based and empirically driven interventions to increase kind behavior are needed. This “State of Kindness” research uses group concept mapping and the reasoned action framework to operationalize kindness and examine the underlying beliefs and psychological determinants of kind behavior in organizations. This formative research is crucial for developing, implementing, and evaluating organizational kindness interventions.

 

About the Speaker: Jeannette Maré, PhD, is the Director of the Science of Kindness Community Collective at the University of Arizona. Her path to becoming a community-engaged kindness researcher was a long and winding one. Jeannette’s world changed drastically after the sudden death of her son in 2002. In the incredible grief of losing Ben, learning and sharing about the lifesaving, world-changing power of kindness became her sole focus. With her heart broken open, she founded Ben’s Bells, a nonprofit that inspires and teaches the intentional practice of kindness. Now a research professor at the University of Arizona, Jeannette leads a research collaborative exploring how to increase kindness in interpersonal relationships, organizations, and communities.

 

 

 

 

Gabrielle E. Miller , SALT Center, The University of Arizona

 

Time: Friday, November 17, 2023 from 1:00 PM - 2:15 PM

Title: Advancing Solutions to Grand Challenges: The Power of Focusing Higher Education and Nonprofit Leadership

 

Link to Presentation Recording: https://youtu.be/1vhxG6IPYsk?feature=shared

 

Abstract: When higher education and nonprofit leaders undertake efforts to address social challenges, leadership complexities can be unexpected and considerable. Moreover, the characteristics of each ‘ecosystem’ often magnify this complexity by distracting from program integrity, sustainability, and advancement. This talk will highlight some of the leadership challenges, strategies that can be effective in both higher education and nonprofit setting, and examples of effective solutions and their impact on building social solutions to grand challenges.

 

About the Speaker: Gabrielle E. Miller, Ed.D. is the Assistant Vice Provost of Student Success and Retention Innovation and the Executive Director of the SALT Center.  She has extensive experience in national nonprofit and higher education leadership. Prior to her current roles at the University of Arizona, Dr. Miller was CEO of Raising a Reader, the nation’s most validated family literacy program, then a part of Silicon Valley Community Foundation. Prior to that she was named Vice President of Programs at Reading Is Fundamental in Washington DC.  She began her career in Baltimore at the Kennedy Krieger Institute and Johns Hopkins University. As Assistant Vice President, Educational Programs at Kennedy Krieger Institute she oversaw special education services and helped to develop a model secondary education program for students with multiple and complex impairments.  She also held a ranked faculty appointment in Johns Hopkins University, College of Education where she taught core courses in the graduate teacher training program and oversaw practicum. Her current research efforts focus on the intersection of social innovation, social enterprise, and leadership in building high quality sustainable interventions for students across all age groups. 

 


Fall 2022 - Spring 2023

Dr. Kenneth White Jr. - How Financial Socialization Messages Relate to Financial Management, Optimism and Stress: Variations by Race

Dr. Amanda Hilton & Dr. Diane Austin - Community-University Relations: Community Perspectives on their Interactions with the University of Arizona

Dr. Dawn Demps - Where do We Go From Here: Black Mothers' School Considerations in Post Covid America

Karen Armknecht, MBA & Victoria Iwinski, MA - The Burden of the Pandemic: How Covid-19 Pushed Inequity Over the Edge


Fall 2021 - Spring 2022

Dr. Lydia Jennings & Mary Beth Jäger - Putting Indigenous Data Sovereignty into Practice: The Indigenous Food Knowledges Network

Dr. Gilberto Lopez - Challenging the Status Quo: Combining the Arts and Social/Health Sciences to Develop Culturally-Tailored COVID-19 Information for Latinx.

Dr. Ted Futris - Elevating Relationships Through Couples Relationship Education

Dr. Jennifer Earl - Young People and Social Movements: What are Scholars and Movements Missing?

Dr. Caroline F.D. Black - Direct and Indirect Effects of Supportive Coparenting Relationships on Children’s Social and Behavioral Development: Does Coparenting Matter More for Children of Teenage Parents than Adult Parents? 


Fall 2020-Spring 2021

Dr. Matthew Lapierre - Negotiating the Child's Consumer Environment: Current Challenges for Parents and Children

Pandemic Impacts on Children, Youth, and Families (Part 2)

Pandemic Impacts on Children, Youth, and Families (Part) 

Dr. Ada Wilkinson-Lee - Using Community-Based Participatory Research to Address Health Disparities in Latinx Communities

Dr. Danielle Hiraldo - Sovereignty in a Pandemic: Tribal Codes as Preparedness


Fall 2019 - Spring 2020

Dr. Rajni Nair - Socio-Cultural Climate: Definitions, Measurements, and Implications

Dr. Michelle Perfect - Family Engagement in Pediatric Sleep Interventions Research

Dr. Alyssa Croft - Causes and Consequences of Asymmetrically Changing Gender Role Stereotypes

Joan Timeche - Taking Lead from Tribal Communities: Visioning the Future for Our Families

Dr. Jennifer Stevens Aubrey - The Push and Pull of Objectification: Investigating the Roles of Traditional Media and New Communication Technologies in Adolescent Self-Objectification


Fall 2018 - Spring 2019

Dr. Gustavo Carlo – Cultural Values as Conduits of Individual and Group Variations in Moral Development

Dr. Ashley Randall – My Stress is our Stress: Understanding Same-Sex Couples Stress and Coping

Dr. Iliana Reyes – Children’s Theories about “the wall” and Teachers’ Documentation of their Experiences

Dr. Neil Websdale – Multidisciplinary and Interdisciplinary Approaches to Family Violence

Dr. Brandon Yoo – A Preliminary Report on a New Measure: Support for Black Lives Matter and Its Psychological Correlates Among Racially Diverse College Students

Dr. Tricia Haynes – Assessing Daily Activity Patterns Through Occupational Transitions (ADAPT): Preliminary Findings

Dr. Jake Harwood – If Music Be The Food of Love...Music in Interpersonal and Intergroup Relationships

Dr. Maggie Pitts – Savoring as Positive Communication: Implications for Relational Health and Wellbeing

Dr. Michele Walsh – Conducting and Communicating Policy-Relevant Research: Early Care and Education in the Greater Tucson Area

Dr. David Sbarra – Divorce and Health: Toward a Translational Science


Spring 2017 - Fall 2018

Dr. Patrick Grzanka – The 'Born This Way' Wars: Science, Sexuality, and the Future of Equality

Dr. Laura Wray-Lake – Youth Civic Empowerment in Urban Community Context

Dr. Francesca Lopez – Nurturing Confianza

Dr. Eleanor Seaton – Racial Discrimination Experiences Among Black Youth

Dr. Kory Floyd – The Importance of Being Prosocial

Dr. Sabrina Helm – Consumer Mindfulness as a Pathway to Decrease Overconsumption

Dr. Sam Steen – Professional School Counselors and Group Work: The missing link in Educational Reform


 

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